• About us
  • Content Guidelines
  • Disclaimer
  • Dog To Human Age Calculator
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop
  • Terms of service
Monday, May 25, 2026
puppadogs.com
  • Home
  • Dog Breed
    • All
    • Great Dane
    • Herding Dogs
    • Large breed
    • majestic breed
    • Medium Breed
    • Mixed breed
    • Pure Breed
    • Small breed
    • Toy breed
    pit bull dog breed

    The Ultimate Guide to Pitbulls: Everything You Need to Know

    Staffordshire Bull Terrier Dog,

    Staffordshire Bull Terrier – A Unique and Lovable Breed

    Plott Hound

    Plott Hound: A Unique and Exceptional Breed

    Bichon Frise

    Bichon Frise Dog Breed: Your Lively and Loving Companion

    Labrabull Dog

    Labrabull Dog Breed: A Fusion of Labrador Retriever and American Pit Bull Terrier

  • Heath & Wellness
    • All
    • Disease
    • Dog supplements
    • Medication
    Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator

    Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator

    Dog Anaesthesia Recovery Timeline Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Dog Anaesthesia Recovery Timeline Calculator

    Dog Hospice End-of-Life Quality of Life Daily Diary Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Dog Hospice End-of-Life Quality of Life Daily Diary Calculator

    Dog Working Sport Calorie Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Dog Working Sport Calorie Calculator

  • Dog Food
    • All
    • Can dogs eat
    • Diet
    • dog food Recipes
    • Food products

    Dog Heat Cycle Calculator: Predict Your Dog’s Next Estrus (2026)

    Dog Food for Sensitive Stomachs

    Best Dog Food for Sensitive Stomachs: How to Choose the Right One for Your Pooch

    Can Dogs Eat Blueberries

    Can Dogs Eat Butter? 2025 Vet-Approved Safety Guide

    Can Dogs Eat Blueberries

    Can Dogs Eat Blueberries? 2025 Vet-Approved Guide + Safety Tips

    Best Dog Food for Allergies

    Best Dog Food for Allergies: How to Choose the Right One for Your Pup

  • Product Reviews
  • Training
  • Shop
  • Dog To Human Age Calculator
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Dog Breed
    • All
    • Great Dane
    • Herding Dogs
    • Large breed
    • majestic breed
    • Medium Breed
    • Mixed breed
    • Pure Breed
    • Small breed
    • Toy breed
    pit bull dog breed

    The Ultimate Guide to Pitbulls: Everything You Need to Know

    Staffordshire Bull Terrier Dog,

    Staffordshire Bull Terrier – A Unique and Lovable Breed

    Plott Hound

    Plott Hound: A Unique and Exceptional Breed

    Bichon Frise

    Bichon Frise Dog Breed: Your Lively and Loving Companion

    Labrabull Dog

    Labrabull Dog Breed: A Fusion of Labrador Retriever and American Pit Bull Terrier

  • Heath & Wellness
    • All
    • Disease
    • Dog supplements
    • Medication
    Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator

    Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator

    Dog Anaesthesia Recovery Timeline Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Dog Anaesthesia Recovery Timeline Calculator

    Dog Hospice End-of-Life Quality of Life Daily Diary Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Dog Hospice End-of-Life Quality of Life Daily Diary Calculator

    Dog Working Sport Calorie Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

    Dog Working Sport Calorie Calculator

  • Dog Food
    • All
    • Can dogs eat
    • Diet
    • dog food Recipes
    • Food products

    Dog Heat Cycle Calculator: Predict Your Dog’s Next Estrus (2026)

    Dog Food for Sensitive Stomachs

    Best Dog Food for Sensitive Stomachs: How to Choose the Right One for Your Pooch

    Can Dogs Eat Blueberries

    Can Dogs Eat Butter? 2025 Vet-Approved Safety Guide

    Can Dogs Eat Blueberries

    Can Dogs Eat Blueberries? 2025 Vet-Approved Guide + Safety Tips

    Best Dog Food for Allergies

    Best Dog Food for Allergies: How to Choose the Right One for Your Pup

  • Product Reviews
  • Training
  • Shop
  • Dog To Human Age Calculator
No Result
View All Result
puppadogs.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Calculator

Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator

Suyash Dhoot by Suyash Dhoot
25 May 2026
in Calculator, Wellness
36 3
0
Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

Lactating Dam and Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator

32
SHARES
356
VIEWS
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Mother + puppies
Lactating Dam + Nursing Puppy Calorie Calculator
Mother’s energy needs + puppy milk replacer math
Lactation is the most metabolically demanding state in a dog’s life – some dams need 4-6x normal calories at peak lactation. This calculator estimates the mother’s energy requirements and (if needed) puppy milk replacer math for orphaned or supplemental-fed puppies. Eclampsia prevention guidance for toy/small breeds.
Lactation nutrition framework. Lactating dams may lose 10-15% body weight despite ad lib feeding – this is generally normal. Eclampsia (hypocalcaemia) is a life-threatening emergency in lactating toy/small breed dams – know the signs. Orphaned puppies require intensive 24-hour care; veterinary or experienced breeder support strongly recommended.

Lactation Is The Most Demanding Metabolic State

A lactating dog has the highest caloric requirement of any life stage — up to 4-6× normal at peak lactation for medium-sized dogs with average litters; even higher for large litters.

This calculator estimates:

  1. The mother’s daily energy requirement
  2. Puppy milk replacer math for orphaned/supplemental feeding
  3. Weaning transition timing
  4. Eclampsia prevention for at-risk toy/small breeds

Dam’s Energy Math

Resting Energy Requirement (RER)

RER = 70 × BW^0.75 kcal/day

Lactation Multipliers By Week

WeekMultiplierNotes
0-11.5×Recovery from whelping + early lactation
1-22.5×Milk production ramping up
2-33.5×Approaching peak
3-44.0× (PEAK)Maximum metabolic demand
4-53.5×Beginning weaning
5-62.5×Active weaning
6-72.0×Late weaning
7+1.6×Post-weaning recovery

Litter Size Adjustment

Litter sizeAdjustmentNotes
1-2 pups0.85×Lower demand than average
3-4 pups1.0×Baseline
5-6 pups1.1×Moderate increase
7-8 pups1.2×Significant increase
9-12 pups1.35×Large litter
13+ pups1.5×Very large litter (Mastiff, large breeds)

Example Calculations

Medium-sized dam (15 kg) with 6-puppy litter at peak lactation (week 3-4):

  • RER = 70 × 15^0.75 = 532 kcal/day
  • Week multiplier × litter adjustment = 4.0 × 1.1 = 4.4×
  • Daily need: 532 × 4.4 = 2342 kcal/day

That’s 4.4× normal RER — most dams cannot consume this much without multiple meals and high-calorie food.

Great Dane dam (50 kg) with 12-puppy litter at peak:

  • RER = 70 × 50^0.75 = 1316 kcal/day
  • Week × litter = 4.0 × 1.35 = 5.4×
  • Daily need: 1316 × 5.4 = 7104 kcal/day

That’s an enormous amount of food — only possible with ad lib feeding of high-calorie puppy/lactation diet.

What To Feed The Lactating Dam

Switch to puppy or lactation formula in late pregnancy (last 3 weeks) and continue throughout lactation.

Why Puppy/Lactation Diet?

  • Higher calorie density (4.0+ kcal/g vs 3.5 adult)
  • Higher protein (28-32% vs 20-25% adult)
  • Higher fat (18-22% vs 12-15% adult)
  • Appropriate calcium/phosphorus for milk production

Recommended Formulas

  • Royal Canin Starter Mother & Babydog
  • Purina Pro Plan Performance Puppy
  • Hill’s Science Diet Puppy Active
  • Eukanuba Premium Performance

Feeding Strategy

  • Free-choice (ad lib) for high-demand dams
  • Multiple small meals easier than 1-2 large
  • Keep food always available
  • Water continuously and abundantly (milk is mostly water)
  • Supplement with: raw eggs, cottage cheese, lean meat occasionally

Dam Weight Loss Is Often Normal

Many dams lose 10-15% body weight during peak lactation despite ad lib feeding — this is generally normal due to extreme metabolic demand.

Concern if:

  • Losing >15% body weight
  • Extreme weakness
  • Anorexia
  • Signs of illness

Post-weaning: gradually return to maintenance feeding; most dams regain weight over weeks; pre-pregnancy weight reached by 2-3 months post-weaning.

Puppy Caloric Needs

Per Hand 2010 + research, puppy needs decrease per gram as they age:

AgeKcal per 100g body weight per day
0-7 days25 kcal/100g
1-2 weeks22 kcal/100g
2-3 weeks18 kcal/100g
3-4 weeks16 kcal/100g
4+ weeks14 kcal/100g

Example: 500g puppy at 2 weeks = 500 × 22/100 = 110 kcal/day

Feeding Frequency For Bottle Feeding

AgeFeedings per dayHours between
Week 18Every 3 hours
Week 26Every 4 hours
Week 35Every 5 hours
Week 44Every 6 hours
4+ weeks3-4Plus solid food

Puppy Milk Replacer

Commercial Formulas (USE THESE)

  • Esbilac (PetAg) — most widely available
  • Royal Canin Babydog Milk
  • PetLac (PetAg)
  • Doc Roy’s Gold Puppy Milk

DO NOT USE

  • Cow’s milk — lactose intolerance, GI upset
  • Goat’s milk — better but still inappropriate
  • Human infant formula — incorrect electrolyte balance
  • Homemade recipes — usually nutritionally inappropriate

Reconstitution

Per label — typically 1 part powder to 2-3 parts warm water.

  • ~1 kcal/mL when reconstituted
  • Refrigerate after mixing
  • Use within 24 hours

Bottle Feeding Technique

  1. Warm to body temperature (38°C/100°F)
  2. Hold puppy abdomen-down or in natural nursing position
  3. NEVER on back like human babies — aspiration risk
  4. Proper-sized nipple (preemie or pet bottle nipples)
  5. Let puppy suckle at own pace (don’t squeeze)
  6. Burp gently after feeding
  7. Ensure swallowing not just chewing
  8. Tube feeding if puppy refuses — requires vet training

Neonatal Period (0-7 Days) – Critical Care

Temperature

  • 32-34°C / 90-93°F environment first week
  • Cannot thermoregulate independently
  • Heat lamp + thermometer in whelping box

Stimulation

  • Stimulate elimination with warm wet cloth on perineum after each feeding
  • Mother normally does this — orphans need manual stimulation
  • Critical — without stimulation, puppies cannot urinate/defecate

Weight Monitoring

  • Weigh daily with kitchen scale (gram precision)
  • Normal: 5-10% body weight gain per day in first week
  • Any puppy not gaining or losing weight = same-day vet contact
  • Consistent slow gain acceptable but watch closely

Humidity

  • 50-60% humidity to prevent dehydration
  • Protect from drafts and chilling

Weaning Transition (3-5 Weeks)

Introducing Solid Food

  1. Mix puppy food with warm water or milk replacer
  2. Gruel consistency initially
  3. Offer 2-3 times daily in shallow dish
  4. Puppies begin lapping at 3-4 weeks
  5. Reduce milk replacer/nursing as solid intake increases
  6. By 5-6 weeks: most puppies eating solid food primarily
  7. By 7-8 weeks: fully weaned

Why Gradual Weaning Matters

Abrupt weaning is bad for dam and puppies:

  • Dam mastitis risk (milk back-up)
  • Puppy GI upset
  • Stress

Gradual over 2-3 weeks is ideal.

Fading Puppy Syndrome

Critical neonatal emergency — puppy “fades” in first few weeks:

Signs

  • Failure to nurse vigorously
  • Cold to touch
  • Limp / weak
  • Crying constantly or unusually quiet
  • Poor or no weight gain
  • Smaller than littermates by 25%+

Causes

  • Hypothermia
  • Hypoglycaemia
  • Dehydration
  • Infection (neonatal sepsis)
  • Congenital defects
  • Failure of passive transfer of maternal antibodies (colostrum)

Emergency Care

  1. Warm gradually to body temperature
  2. Glucose solution rubbed on gums (5-10%)
  3. Subcutaneous fluids if vet available
  4. URGENT VET — can deteriorate rapidly
  5. Tube feeding if too weak to nurse

Outcomes: variable; prompt intervention improves chances significantly.

Eclampsia (Hypocalcaemia) – Life-Threatening

Most common in toy/small breed lactating bitches 1-3 weeks post-whelping when milk demand peaks.

Signs (Progressive)

  1. Restlessness, panting
  2. Muscle tremors especially face/legs
  3. Stiff gait
  4. Fever
  5. Ataxia / collapse
  6. Seizures
  7. Coma / death if untreated

Emergency Treatment

  • Calcium gluconate IV at vet immediately
  • Life-threatening — minutes-to-hours timeframe
  • Cool calm environment while transporting
  • Remove puppies from dam during stabilization

Prevention

  • Calcium supplementation POST-WHELPING ONLY (NOT pre-whelping!)
  • Animal Essentials Calcium or similar
  • Vet-prescribed calcium tablets ready at home for toy breed dams
  • Good lactation diet
  • Monitor closely 1-3 weeks post-whelping
  • Frequent meals for stable calcium availability

Why NOT Pre-Whelping Calcium

Pre-whelping calcium SUPPRESSES the parathyroid response needed during lactation — increases eclampsia risk. Save calcium supplementation for AFTER whelping.

Orphaned Puppies – Intensive Care

24/7 commitment for several weeks.

Veterinary Support

  • Consult with vet as soon as orphaning occurs
  • Neonatal veterinary specialist if available
  • Experienced rescue or breeder support invaluable

Critical Weight Gain

  • 5-10% body weight per day target first week
  • Any puppy not gaining = same-day vet contact
  • Weigh 4× daily for struggling puppies

Foster Mother

Best outcome if available — dog or cat with similar-age litter:

  • Better nutrition than commercial formula
  • Better immune support
  • Better socialization

Hand-Rearing Schedule

Continuous demanding work:

  • Week 1: 8 feedings/day every 3 hours INCLUDING overnight
  • Week 2: 6 feedings/day
  • Week 3-4: 4-5 feedings/day
  • 5+ weeks: transitioning to solid food

Hydration

Critical — dehydration kills neonates fast:

  • Watch for: dry gums, skin tent, lethargy
  • Subcutaneous fluids if necessary (vet teaches owner)

Honest Caveats

  • Calorie estimates are starting points — observe dam’s weight and BCS
  • Individual variation substantial
  • Large litters push dam to extreme metabolic demand
  • Lactating dams need patience — they’re working harder than any other life stage
  • Orphan care is demanding — consider rescue/breeder support
  • Eclampsia is true emergency — minutes matter

Conclusion

Lactation is the most metabolically demanding state in a dog’s life. Peak lactation (weeks 3-4) requires 4-6× normal calories, sometimes higher for large litters. Puppy or lactation diet (higher calorie density, protein, fat) is essential. Ad lib feeding is appropriate. Some weight loss is normal but >15% concerning. Puppy milk replacer math: 25 kcal/100g BW first week decreasing to 14 kcal/100g by week 4; 8 feedings/day in week 1 decreasing to 4/day by week 4. Commercial formulas only (Esbilac, Royal Canin Babydog, PetLac) — never cow’s milk or human formula. Eclampsia is a life-threatening emergency in small/toy breed dams 1-3 weeks post-whelping — calcium supplementation POST-WHELPING ONLY (not pre-whelping which worsens risk). Orphan care requires intensive 24/7 work — veterinary or experienced breeder support strongly recommended. Weight monitoring of all puppies daily is the single most important neonatal task — any puppy not gaining 5-10% daily warrants urgent vet attention.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories does a lactating dog need?

DEPENDS on lactation week and litter size. PEAK lactation (weeks 3-4) requires 4-6x RER. CALCULATION: RER (70 × BW^0.75) × week multiplier (1: 1.5x, 2: 2.5x, 3-4 PEAK 4x, 5: 3.5x, 6: 2.5x, 7+: 2x weaning) × litter size adjustment (1-2 pups 0.85x, 3-4 pups 1.0x, 5-6 pups 1.1x, 7-8 pups 1.2x, 9-12 pups 1.35x, 13+ pups 1.5x). EXAMPLE: 15 kg medium-breed dam with 6-puppy litter at peak = 532 × 4.0 × 1.1 = 2342 kcal/day (4.4x normal). 50 kg Great Dane with 12-puppy litter = 1316 × 4.0 × 1.35 = 7104 kcal/day. FEED AD LIB puppy/lactation formula (higher calorie density 4+ kcal/g).

What should I feed my puppy if their mother can’t nurse?

COMMERCIAL PUPPY MILK REPLACER specifically formulated for dogs. SAFE PRODUCTS: ESBILAC (PetAg) most widely available; ROYAL CANIN BABYDOG MILK; PETLAC (PetAg); DOC ROY’S GOLD PUPPY MILK. DO NOT USE: cow’s milk (lactose intolerance causes diarrhoea), goat’s milk (improvement but still inappropriate), human infant formula (wrong electrolyte balance, wrong nutrient ratios). RECONSTITUTE per label (typically 1 part powder to 2-3 parts warm water = ~1 kcal/mL). FEEDING SCHEDULE – week 1: every 3 hours (8/day) including OVERNIGHT; week 2: every 4 hours (6/day); week 3: every 5 hours (5/day); week 4: every 6 hours (4/day plus solid food). VOLUME 25 kcal/100g BW first week decreasing to 14 kcal/100g by week 4. EMERGENCY: vet consultation for orphaned puppies.

What is eclampsia in lactating dogs?

HYPOCALCAEMIA in lactating bitches – LIFE-THREATENING emergency. Most common in TOY/SMALL BREEDS (under 10 kg) 1-3 WEEKS POST-WHELPING when milk demand peaks. SIGNS progressive: restlessness/panting → muscle tremors (face/legs especially) → stiff gait → fever → ataxia/collapse → seizures → coma/death untreated. EMERGENCY TREATMENT: CALCIUM GLUCONATE IV at vet immediately – life-threatening; minutes-to-hours timeframe. PREVENTION: calcium supplementation POST-WHELPING ONLY (NOT pre-whelping which suppresses parathyroid response and worsens risk); good lactation diet; monitor closely 1-3 weeks post-whelping. Toy breed dams should have vet-prescribed calcium tablets available at home. Cool calm transport to vet during emergency; remove puppies from dam during stabilization.

How fast should newborn puppies gain weight?

CRITICAL MONITORING: 5-10% BODY WEIGHT GAIN PER DAY in first week. WEIGH DAILY with kitchen scale (gram precision). NORMAL pattern: consistent gain (variable by individual); largest puppies often dominant nursers; smaller puppies may struggle. CONCERNING: any puppy LOSING weight; FAILING TO GAIN over 24 hours; SMALLER THAN LITTERMATES by 25%+. INTERVENTION for struggling puppy: warm environment; supplemental feeding via bottle (Esbilac); weight checks 4x daily; vet consultation within 24 hours. FADING PUPPY SYNDROME = puppy ‘fades’ in first few weeks – failure to nurse, cold, limp, poor weight gain – EMERGENCY VET. Track each puppy individually – color-coded yarn collar around neck (loose) identifies each.

When can puppies be weaned?

WEANING TRANSITION begins at 3-4 WEEKS, completes by 7-8 WEEKS. PROCESS: (1) WEEK 3-4 introduce solid food – mix puppy food with warm water or milk replacer to GRUEL consistency, offer 2-3 times daily in shallow dish; (2) PUPPIES BEGIN LAPPING; (3) GRADUALLY REDUCE milk replacer / nursing as solid food intake increases; (4) BY 5-6 WEEKS most puppies eating solid food primarily; (5) BY 7-8 WEEKS fully weaned. ABRUPT WEANING bad – causes dam mastitis (milk back-up), puppy GI upset, stress. GRADUAL OVER 2-3 WEEKS ideal. SOLID FOOD: high-quality puppy formula (Royal Canin Starter Mother & Babydog, Purina Pro Plan Puppy, Hill’s Science Diet Puppy). Maintain ad lib feeding for dam during weaning even as her milk demand decreases.

Can dam lose weight while lactating?

YES – and 10-15% BODY WEIGHT LOSS DURING PEAK LACTATION is GENERALLY NORMAL despite ad lib feeding. The metabolic demand is so extreme that even with maximum food intake, dams often cannot maintain body weight. WHY ACCEPTABLE: temporary, dam regains weight post-weaning, milk production is biological priority. WHEN CONCERNING: losing more than 15% body weight; extreme weakness; anorexia; not eating despite available food; signs of illness. POST-WEANING: gradually return to maintenance feeding; most dams regain weight over weeks; pre-pregnancy weight reached by 2-3 months post-weaning. SUPPORTING DAM: ad lib puppy/lactation formula (higher calorie density), multiple small meals, abundant water, palatable supplements (raw eggs, cottage cheese, lean meat). FREE-CHOICE FEEDING throughout lactation – dam regulates as needed.

Whelping & Lactation Essentials

Critical supplies for whelping, lactating dam, and neonatal puppy care – milk replacer for orphans, warming pads, scales for daily weighing, lactation diet.

Esbilac Powder Puppy Milk ReplacerEsbilac Powder Puppy Milk Replacer
PetAg
Most widely-used commercial puppy milk replacer – safe for orphaned puppies; ~1 kcal/mL when reconstituted.
View on Amazon →
PetAg Nurser Bottle Kit for PuppiesPetAg Nurser Bottle Kit for Puppies
PetAg
Pet-specific nursing bottle with preemie nipples for safe bottle feeding of neonatal puppies.
View on Amazon →
Elevated Dog Bowl Stand for DamElevated Dog Bowl Stand for Dam
Various
Raised feeding station for lactating dam consuming 3-5x normal calorie intake.
View on Amazon →
Nordic Naturals Pet Cod Liver OilNordic Naturals Pet Cod Liver Oil
Nordic Naturals
Omega-3 supports lactating dam health + puppy DHA needs for brain development.
View on Amazon →
VetriScience Canine Plus MultivitaminVetriScience Canine Plus Multivitamin
VetriScience
Multivitamin support during lactation peak metabolic demand.
View on Amazon →
Whelping Box Orthopedic PaddingWhelping Box Orthopedic Padding
Furrybaby
Memory foam pad for whelping box – comfort for dam during prolonged nursing.
View on Amazon →
Affiliate disclosure: PuppaDogs is an Amazon Services LLC Associates Program participant. We may earn commission on qualifying Amazon purchases at no additional cost to you. Product recommendations are based on evidence quality and reputation, not commission. Always discuss new supplements or treatments with your veterinarian.

Related PuppaDogs Calculators

Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:

  • Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
  • Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
  • Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
  • Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
  • Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
  • Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)

References & Further Reading

The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.

  1. NRC. Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. National Academies Press, 2006.
  2. Earle KE. Calculations for the design of complete diets for nursing and lactating dogs. Veterinary Clinical Nutrition.
  3. Lawler DF. Neonatal and pediatric care of the puppy. Theriogenology.
  4. Hand MS et al. Small Animal Clinical Nutrition, 5th ed. Mark Morris Institute.
  5. Indrebo A, Trangerud C, Moe L. Canine neonatal mortality in four large breeds. Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica.
  6. Hoskins JD. Veterinary Pediatrics: Dogs and Cats from Birth to Six Months. Saunders.
  7. Davidson AP, Smith FO. Pregnancy Diagnosis, Whelping, and Postpartum. In: Manual of Small Animal Reproduction and Neonatology.
  8. PuppaDogs. Calorie & Dry Food Calculator, Pregnancy/Whelping Due-Date Calculator, Newborn Puppy Weight Tracker, Vetoryl Calculator. puppadogs.com.
Suyash Dhoot
Suyash Dhoot
Tags: dam lactation nutritioneclampsia preventionlactating dog caloriesnewborn puppy feedingpuppy milk replacer
Previous Post

Dog Anaesthesia Recovery Timeline Calculator

Next Post

Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator

Next Post
Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator - free PuppaDogs calculator

Pre-Adoption Cost and Breed Compatibility Calculator

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Products

  • PuppaDog's Beautiful Large Dog House PuppaDog's Beautiful Large Dog House $721.00
  • Royal Canin Maltese Adult Dry Dog Food, 2.5 lb bag Royal Canin Maltese Adult Dry Dog Food, 2.5 lb bag $25.98
  • Royal Canin Large Breed Adult Dry Dog Food, 6 lb bag Royal Canin Large Breed Adult Dry Dog Food, 6 lb bag $29.99
  • Royal Canin Yorkshire Terrier Adult Dry Dog Food, 10 lb bag Royal Canin Yorkshire Terrier Adult Dry Dog Food, 10 lb bag $61.99
  • Royal Canin Shih Tzu Adult Breed Specific Dry Dog Food, 10 lb bag Royal Canin Shih Tzu Adult Breed Specific Dry Dog Food, 10 lb bag $61.99 Original price was: $61.99.$57.88Current price is: $57.88.
puppadogs.com

© 2023 Puppa dogs - Tail-Wagging Tales and Tips

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Content Guidelines
  • Terms of service

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About us
  • Content Guidelines
  • Disclaimer
  • Dog To Human Age Calculator
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Shop
  • Terms of service

© 2023 Puppa dogs - Tail-Wagging Tales and Tips

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In